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Lecture 4

Lecture 4. Weather Maps and Models Chapters 3 and 4. Homework. Due Friday, September 22, 2006 (add to previous homework) Ch 4 TYU 2,6,9,12,14,17,18,23,25 TYPSS #2. Meteograms. Display state variables graphically over a period of time. AOS rooftop site: http://rig.ssec.wisc.edu/.

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Lecture 4

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  1. Lecture 4 Weather Maps and Models Chapters 3 and 4

  2. Homework • Due Friday, September 22, 2006 (add to previous homework) • Ch 4 TYU 2,6,9,12,14,17,18,23,25 TYPSS #2

  3. Meteograms • Display state variables graphically over a period of time. • AOS rooftop site: http://rig.ssec.wisc.edu/

  4. Surface Station Model

  5. Surface Station Model

  6. Weather Symbols

  7. Surface Maps Station Plots Dew point analysis MSLP analysis(mean sea level pressure) Temperature analysis

  8. Upper Air Station Plot Upper air charts http://www.aos.wisc.edu/weatherdata

  9. Upper Air chart(Constant pressure surface) Upper air charts http://www.aos.wisc.edu/weatherdata

  10. Forecasting Weather

  11. Weather Models • Mathematical equations describe how: • Air accelerates or decelerates based on Newton’s Laws • Mass of air and its properties move from one position to another while conserving properties of mass and energy • Mass of water vapor is moved and transformed to rain and snow • Air is heated or cooling by condensation, radiation • These differential equations are integrated forward in time by solving them numerically on a grid

  12. Two Basic types of Models • Finite Difference Model • Solved on a grid • Taylor series approximations to continuous equations • Spectral Model • Analysis of variables on a grid in real space is transformed to a grid in wave space grid using a Fourier transform • Equations moved forward in wave space analytically • Variables transformed back to real space

  13. Examples of Horizontal Grids

  14. Vertical Grid • Vertical grid may be : • Height coordinate • Pressure coordinate • Sigma or terrain following coordinate

  15. Map Projection • Various map projections are used to take into account the curved Earth surface. For instance: • Mercator projection • Polar Stereographic Grid • Lambert Conformal • Spherical Grid

  16. Topography Representation

  17. Ensemble Prediction

  18. Look at AOS Web Page • Real Time analysis and Prediction available on the Web: Weather Maps (Current and Forecast Maps): http://www.aos.wisc.edu/weather/index.htm (Maps drawn by UW AOS Department) http://cup.aos.wisc.edu (Tripoli’s NMS Model output) http://www.nws.noaa.gov/outlook_tab.php (National Weather Service Maps) http://weather.unisys.com/ (Unisys (Purdue) Maps….traditional leader in Internet map technology) http://www.meteo.psu.edu/%7Egadomski/ewall.html (Penn State Electronic Maps) http://www.atmos.albany.edu/weather/difax.html (NWS difax maps from SUNY Albany) http://www.rap.ucar.edu/weather/ (National Center for Atmospheric Research Weather) http://hdrweather.com/f2p2/default.htm (Colorado weather by Henz)

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